Imatges de pàgina
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ENGLAND'S faithfull reprover and monitour. [By Richard SAMWAIES.] London, 1653. Duodecimo.* [Wood, Athen. Oxon., iii. 838.]

ENGLAND'S great concern in the choice of this new parliament; deIdicated to all her free-holders and electors. [By William PENN.]

N. P. [1679.] Folio. 1 Sh. [Smith's
Cat. of Friends' books, i. 40; ii. 297.]
Signed "Phil'anglus." Printed in Penn's
works, ii. 678.

ENGLAND'S heroes! By the author of "Belgravia," "Temptation," &c., &c., &c. [Mrs. GASCOIGNE.]

N. P. 1855. Octavo. No pagination. * ENGLANDS interest by trade asserted, shewing the necessity & excellency thereof. Wherein is discovered, that many hundred thousand pounds might be gained to the king and kingdom, by the due improvement of the product thereof, more particularly by wool, and the evil consequences of its exportation unmanufactured. Wherein is evident, that by one pack, is one hundred pound loss, which otherwise might be gained. The methods how, and some helps for remedy, humbly offered. By W. C. A servant to his king and country. [William CARTER.] The second impression, corrected and enlarged. London, 1671. Quarto.*

Authorship acknowledged in "A summary of certain papers about wooll, as the interest of England is concerned in it," published, with the author's name at dedication, in 1685. See Address to the reader. ENGLANDS ioy, for suppressing the Papists, and banishing the priests and Iesuites. [By Thomas SCOT, B.D.] Printed M.DC.XXIV. Quarto.* [Bodl.] ENGLANDS looking in and out, presented to the High Court of Parliament now assembled. By the author R. M. [Ralph MADDISON, knight.] London: 1640. Quarto. [W.] ENGLAND'S monarchs: or, a compendious relation of the most remarkable transactions, and observable passages, ecclesiastical, civil, and military, which have hapned during the reigns of the kings and queens of England, from the invasion of the Romans to this present. Adorned with poems, and the pictures of every monarch, from William the conqueror,

to his present majesty, our gracious sovereign, king Charles the second: together with the names of his majesty's most honourable privy council, the nobility, bishops, deans, and principal officers, civil and military, in England, in the year 1684. By R. B. author of the Admirable curiosities in England; The historical remarks in London and Westminster; The late wars in England, Scotland, and Ireland, &c. [Richard BURTON.]

London, 1685. Duodecimo. Pp. 2. b. t. 234. [Bodl.]

*

ENGLAND'S mourning garment; worn here by plain shepherds, in memory of their sacred mistress, Elisabeth, queen of virtue, while she lived, and theme of sorrow, being dead. To which is added the true manner of her imperial funeral after which follows the shepherds spring-song, for entertainment of King James, our most potent sovereign. Dedicated to all that loved the deceased queen, and honour the living king. [By Henry CHETTLE.] London, N. D. Quarto.*

Reprinted in the Harleian Miscellany, vol. iii., pp. 500-518.

ENGLANDS Parnassus :

or the choysest flowers of our moderne poets, with their poeticall comparisons. Descriptions of bewties, personages, castles, pallaces, mountaines, groues, seas, springs, riuers, &c. Whereunto are

annexed other various discourses, both pleasaunt and profitable. [By R. ALLOT.]

London, 1600. Octavo. Pp. 8. b. t. 510.* Dedication and To the Reader signed R. A. ENGLAND'S present interest consider'd with honour to the prince, and safety to the people. In answer to this one question; what is most fit, easie and safe at this juncture of affairs to be done, for composing, at least quieting of differences; allaying the heat of contrary interests, & making them subservient to the interest of the government, and consistent with the prosperity of the kingdom? Presented and submitted to the consideration of superiours. [By William PENN.] Printed in the year, 1675. Quarto. 8 sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, ii. 293.] The second edition, printed in the same year, has the author's name.

ENGLANDS selected characters, de

scribing the good and bad worthies of

this age. VVhere the best may see their graces, and the worst discerne their basenesse. The particulars be these, IA worthy king. 2 An unworthy king. 3 A worthy queen. 4 An unworthy woman. 5 A worthy prince. 6 An unworthy prince. 7 A worthy privy counsillour. 8 An unworthy privy counsillour. 9 A worthy noble-man. IO An unworthy nobleman. II A worthy bishop or minister. 12 An unworthy bishop or minister. 13 A worthy judge. 14 An unworthy judge. 15 Á worthy knight & souldier. 16 An unworthy knight & souldier. 17 A worthy gentleman. 18 An unworthy gentleman. 19 A worthy lawyer. 20 An unworthy lawyer. 21 A worthy souldier. 22 An untrained souldier. 23 A worthy physitian. 24 An unworthy physitian. 25 A Jesuit reprobated. 26 A cowardly cavalier. 27 A bawd of the black guard. 28 A malignant knave a hatcher of plots. [By Nicholas BRETON.]

London, printed for T. S. 1643. Quarto.* To the reader signed B. N.

ENGLAND'S teares for the present wars. [By James HOWELL.]

London: 1644. Quarto. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

Reprinted in the Harleian Miscellany. ENGLANDS troubles anatomized, wherein is related the rise, cause, beginning, unhappy progresse of this uncivill warr. Illustrated in all the passages thereof, whence this malignancy first sprang, which hath so rent and torne this late so flourishing kingdome of England. Manifested from the beginning to this present time. Written by a captaine, servant to his majesty, who fights his battels with the parliament. [J. COCKAYNE.] London, 1644. [Brit. Mus.]

Quarto. Pp. vi. 55.

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Parliament. By a true lover of his country. [Edward CHAMBERLAYNE, LL.D.]

London, 1667. Quarto.* [Bodl.]

Ascribed to W. Carey. [W., Brit. Mus.] ENGLAND'S worthies: under whom all the civill and bloudy warres, since anno 1642 to anno 1647, are related, wherein are described, the severall battails, encounters and assaults, of cities, townes and castles, at several times and places, so that the reader may behold the time, yeare, and event of every battle, skirmish and assault. Wherein London apprentices had not the least share. As also, several victories by sea, by the noble admiral, Robert Earle of Warwick. [By John VICARS.] London: 1647. Reprinted 1819. Quarto. Pp. 1. b. t. 67.* [Bodl.]

ENGLISH adventures, by a person of honour. [Roger BOYLE, Earl of Orrery.]

In the Savoy, 1676. Octavo. [W.,Bliss' Cat.] ENGLISH advice to the freeholders of England. [By Francis ATTERBURY, D.D.]

Printed in the year, 1714. Octavo.* [Bodl.] ENGLISH (the) alphabet for the use of foreigners wherein the pronunciation of the vowels is explained, as abridged from a larger work. [By G. SHARP.] London: 1786. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.] ENGLISH (the) anthology. [By Joseph RITSON.] [In three volumes.] London: MDCCXCIII-IV. Octavo.* ENGLISH (the) army in France: being the personal narrative of an officer. [By John Gordon SMITH, M.D.] In two volumes.

London: 1830. Duodecimo.* [Aberdeen Lib.]

ENGLISH (an) ballad: in answer to Mr. Despreaux's Pindarique ode on the taking of Namure. [By Matthew PRIOR.]

London, MDCXCV. Folio. Pp. 7. b. t.* [Bodl.]

Despreaux's Ode is given on the opposite pages.

ENGLISH (the) ballance, weighing the reasons of Englands present conjunction with France, against the Dutch. With some observes upon his Majesties declaration of liberty to

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Printed in the year MDCLXXII. Quarto.*

ENGLISH bards, and Scotch reviewers. A satire. [By George Gordon Noel BYRON, Lord Byron.]

London N. D. [1809.] Duodecimo.*

ENGLISH (the) baronetage, containing a genealogical and historic account of all the English baronets now existing, their descents, marriages and issues. [By T. WOTTON.]

London 1851. Octavo. [Athen. Cat. (2d. Sup.) p. 156.]

ENGLISH (the) boy at the Cape, an Anglo-African story. By the author of Keeper's travels. [E. A. KENDALL.] In three volumes.

London 1835. Duodecimo. [W., Brit. Mus.]

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ENGLISH (the) connoisseur : containing an account of whatever is curious in painting, sculpture, &c. in the palaces and seats of the nobility and principal gentry of England, both in town and country. [By Thomas MARTYN, F.R.S.] 2 vols.

London: MDCCLXVI. Octavo.* [Gent.
Mag., July 1825, p. 86. Lowndes, Bibliog.
Man., p. 511.]

ENGLISH country life. By Martingale. [— WHITE.]

London: 1843. Duodecimo. [Adv. Lib.]

ENGLISH (the) Cratylus; or essays on language, grammar, and composition. [By J. SUTCLIFFE.]

London: 1825. Duodecimo. [Brit.
Mus.]

ENGLISH (the) dance of death, from the designs of Thomas Rowlandson, with metrical relations, by the author of "Doctor Syntax." [William COMBE.] [Two volumes.]

London: 1815-16. Octavo.*

ENGLISH (an) dictionary, or interpreter of hard words. By H. C. [Henry COCKERAN.]

London: 1632. Octavo. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

ENGLISH (the) empire in America: or,

a view of the dominions of the Crown of England in the West-Indies. Namely, Newfoundland, New-England, NewYork, Pensilvania, New-Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, Carolina, Bermudas, Berbuda, Anguilla, Monserrat, Dominica, St. Vincent, Antego, Mevis or Nevis, St. Christophers, Barbadoes, Jamaica. With an account of the discovery, situation, product, and other excellencies and rarities of these countries. To which is prefix'd a relation of the first discovery of the new world, call'd America, by the Spaniards. And of the remarkable voyages of several English-men to divers places therein. Illustrated with maps and pictures. By R. B. [Richard BURTON.] The fifth edition.

London: 1711. Duodecimo. Pp. 191.* [Bodl.]

a

ENGLISH fashionables abroad: novel. [By Mrs. C. D. BURDETT.] In three volumes.

London: 1827. Duodecimo.*

ENGLISH (the) fortune-tellers: containing several necessary questions resolved by the ablest antient philosophers, and modern astrologers, gathered fron their writings and manuscripts by J. P. student in astrology. John PHILLIPS.]

London: 1703. Quarto. Pp. 158. [Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

ENGLISH (an) girl's account of a Moravian settlement in the Black Forest. Edited by the author of "Mary Powell." [Anne MANNING.] London: 1858. Octavo. Pp. viii. 311.* The author in the dedication signs herself Beatrice.

ENGLISH (an) harmony of the four Evangelists, generally disposed after the manner of the Greek of William Newcome, Archbishop of Armagh; with a map of Palestine, divided according to the twelve tribes, explanatory notes, and indexes. [By Richard PHILLIPS, and Thomas THOMPSON.] London: 1802. Octavo. 30 sh. [Smith's Cat. of Friends' books, i. 78.]

ENGLISH hearts and English hands; or, the railway and the trenches. By the author of the "Memorials of Captain Hedley Vicars." [Miss Catherine MARSH.] Twenty-second thousand.

London: M. DCCC. LVIII. Octavo. Pp. xv. 356.*

ENGLISH (the) heroe: or, Sir Francis Drake revived. Being a full account of the dangerous voyages, admirable adventures, notable discoveries, and magnanimous atchievements of that valiant and renowned commander. As, I. His voyage in 1572. to Nombre de Dios in the West-Indies, where they saw a pile of bars of silver near seventy foot long, ten foot broad, and 12 foot high. II. His incompassing the whole world in 1577. which he performed in two years and ten months, gaining a vast quantity of gold and silver. III. His voyage into America in 1585. and taking the towns of St. Jago, St. Domingo, Carthagena, and St. Augustine. IV. His last voyage into those countreys in 1595. with the manner of his death and burial. Recommended as an excellent example to all heroick and active spirits in these days to endeavour to benefit their prince and countrey, and immortalize their names by the like worthy undertakings. Revised, corrected, very much inlarged, reduced into chapters with contents, and beautified with pictures. By R. B. [Richard, or Robert BURTON, alias Nath. CROUCH.] Licensed and entred according to order, March 30. 1687.

London. 1687. Duodecimo. Pp. 2. b. t. 206.*

ENGLISH history in question and answer... from the Conquest to the present time... By a lady. [Jane BUDGE.] A new edition, revised and enlarged. London: 1860. Octavo. [Boase and Courtney, Bib. Corn., i. 50.]

ENGLISH humanity no paradox; or an attempt to prove that the English are not a nation of savages. [By Edward LONG.]

London: 1778. Octavo. [Gent. Mag.,
May 1813, p. 490.]

ENGLISH (the) in America. By the
author of "Sam Slick, the clock-
maker," "The attaché," "The old
judge,' etc. [Thomas Chandler HALI-
BURTON.] In two volumes.
London 1851. Duodecimo.*

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ENGLISH (the) in Italy. [By Constantine Henry PHIPPS, Marquis of Normanby.] In three volumes.

London: 1825. Duodecimo. [W., Brit. Mus.]

ENGLISH liberties: or, the free-born subject's inheritance, containing I. Magna Charta, the Petition of right, the Habeas Corpus act; and divers other most useful statutes: with large comments upon each of them. II. The proceedings in appeals of murther; the work and power of Parliaments; the qualifications necessary for such as should be chosen to that great trust. Plain directions for all persons concerned in ecclesiastical courts; and how to prevent or take off the writ De excummunicato capiendo. As also the oath and duty of grand and petty juries. III. All the laws against conventicles and Protestant dissenters with notes, and directions both to constables and others concern'd, thereupon; and an abstract of all the laws against Papists. [By Henry CARE.]

London N. D. Duodecimo.*

A 4th ed. with the author's name, and continued, with large additions, by W. N[elson], of the Middle Temple, was published, In the Savoy, 1719. 8vo.

ENGLISH life, social and domestic, in the middle of the nineteenth century, considered in reference to our position as a community of professing Christians. By the author of "Reverses." [Mrs. WHATELY.]

London: 1847. Duodecimo.* [Publisher.] ENGLISH (the) maiden: her moral and domestic duties. [By A. B. MUZZEY.] London 1841. Duodecimo.

The advertisement is signed H. G. C[larke], the publisher.

ENGLISH (the) martyrologe, conteyning a summary of the lives of the glorious and renowned saintes of the

three kingdomes, England, Scotland, and Ireland. Collected and distributed into moneths, after the forme of a calendar, according to every saintes festivity. Whereunto is annexed in the end a catalogue of those who have suffered death in England for defence of the Catholicke cause since King Henry the 8. his breach with the Sea Apostolicke, unto this day. By a Catholicke priest. [John WATSON.] Permissu Superiorum. Anno 1608. Octavo.* The dedication "To the Catholickes of England, Scotland and Ireland," is signed J. W. Priest.

The above work has also been ascribed to John Wilson. In the Bodleian printed Catalogue, it is entered under J. Wilson, with a reference to the opinion of Lowndes who ascribes it to Watson. In the preface to an anonymous work on the same subject, published at London in 1761, and entitled "A memorial of ancient British Piety or, a British Martyrology," &c., the book is said to have been written by "Mr. John Wilson, an English priest (who lived abroad in the Low Countries.)"

ENGLISH (the) martyrology_abridged from Foxe, by Charlotte Elizabeth. [Charlotte Elizabeth TONNA.] In two volumes.

London. MDCCCXXXVII.

Octavo.*

ENGLISH minstrelsy, being a selection of fugitive poetry from the best English authors, with some original pieces hitherto unpublished. [Edited by Sir Walter SCOTT.] In two volumes.

Edinburgh: 1810. Octavo. [W., Brit. Mus.]

ENGLISH orthographie or the art of right spelling, reading, pronouncing, and writing all sorts of English words. Wherein such, as one can possibly mistake, are digested in an alphabetical order, under their several, short, yet plain rules. Also some rules for the points, and pronunciation, and the using of the great letters. Together with the difference between words of like sound. All which are so suited to every capacitie, that he, who studies this art, according to the directions in the epistle, may be speedily and exactly grounded in the whole language. [By Owen PRICE, M.A.]

Oxford. 1668. Quarto. Pp. 4. b. t. 67.* [Wood, Athen. Oxon., ii. 490.] ENGLISH paradise. Discovered in the Latine prospect of Iacobs blessing.

Gen. 27. 27. Ecce odor filij mei sicut odor agri à domino benedicti. Preached at S. Bvttolphs without Aldersgate at London, on the holy Sabboth commonly called Trinitie Sunday, in that ioifull season of the festiuall solemnities for the blessed creation of the most gracious Prince of Wales. [By John WHITE, Caius College, Cambridge.]

London 1612. Quarto. Pp. 2. b. t. 61.* [Bodl.]

Dedication signed Ih. Wh.

ENGLISH (the) parliament represented in a vision. With an after-thought upon the speech deliver'd to his most Christian Majesty, by the deputies of the states of Britany, on the 29th. day of February last; and the number of votes and sermons the tories made at London for twenty seven years. To which is added at large, that memorable representation of the House of Commons to the Queen, in the year 17; from whence Great Britain and the allies now date their late misfortunes, and France all her present power and grandeur. The answer of the States-general, with other remarks, are enter'd at the end of the articles of the said representation. All being worthy now of notice upon the meeting of the new parliament. Writ in two books. By the author of An inquiry into the mis-carriages of the four last years reign. [Charles POVEY.] London: 1715. Octavo.*

ENGLISH (the) peerage; or, a view of the ancient and present state of the English nobility; to which is subjoined, a chronological account of such titles as have become extinct from the Conquest to the beginning of the year 1790. [By Charles CATTON, R.A., herald painter.] In three volumes. London: 1790. Quarto. [W., Lowndes, Bibliog. Man.]

ENGLISH (the) preacher, or sermons on the principal subjects of religion and morality, selected, revised and abridged from various authors [by William ENFIELD, LL.D.] In nine volumes.

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